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- <text id=90TT0168>
- <title>
- Jan. 22, 1990: Africa:Death By Starvation
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 22, 1990 A Murder In Boston
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 40
- AFRICA
- Death by Starvation
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>This time the threat of mass famine is less the caprice of cruel
- nature than the work of obstinate men
- </p>
- <p> Of all the obscenities of war, none is as inexcusable as the
- deliberate slaughter of civilians. Yet much of the world is
- silent now, though millions of innocent Africans stand in
- jeopardy of extinction. These people will not die by the sword
- or the other traditional implements of war. Instead, they will
- be slain by one of the cruelest weapons of any era--starvation. They will die slowly and painfully; in a world of
- abundance, they will die hungry.
- </p>
- <p> And most of the dying will be done in the Horn of Africa.
- In Ethiopia upwards of 4.5 million people, more than four times
- the number wiped out by the great famine of 1984-85, may starve
- this year if food relief is not provided--and soon. In Sudan,
- where as many as a quarter of a million people died of hunger
- in 1987-88, the most dire estimates suggest that 3 million
- could suffer the same fate by the middle of this decade. Once
- again the world may see those sickening images: skeletal
- children too weak to swat away the flies that swarm around
- their eyes; old people slumped against herding sticks, too
- weary to take another step.
- </p>
- <p> Famine in Africa may seem like yesterday's news. This time,
- however, the prospect of mass starvation is not just the
- caprice of nature but is largely the work of man. Drought and
- crop failures have not gone unnoticed. Wealthy donor nations
- have pledged hundreds of thousands of tons of foodstuffs.
- Distribution networks exist to allocate the food. Relief
- convoys stand ready to move it. All that separates millions of
- malnourished Ethiopians and Sudanese from the food that could
- save their lives is a handful of stubborn men: President
- Mengistu Haile Mariam of Ethiopia, Lieut. General Omar Hassan
- el Bashir, the head of Sudan's 15-man junta, and the rebel
- leaders opposing them. All are more intent upon winning their
- wars than feeding the people they are supposedly fighting for.
- "If people die this time, it is not going to be because of the
- drought but because of the military and political situation,"
- says Father Michael Schultheis, an American Jesuit based in
- Nairobi.
- </p>
- <p> ETHIOPIA. The last time famine visited, the rains had failed
- for three years and people were already dying before the world
- awakened to the tragedy. This time most of the country had a
- better than normal harvest in 1988 and crop failures are
- confined to the northern provinces of Eritrea, Tigre and Wollo.
- Moreover, there is food in the relief pipeline; last week the
- United Nations' World Food Program announced an additional $8
- million in emergency food aid, and the European Community
- raised its pledge $12 million.
- </p>
- <p> Yet a hunger crisis may hit as early as March because most
- of the people at risk are trapped behind lines controlled by
- the three insurgent armies battling Mengistu's troops. Mengistu
- so far refuses to let relief convoys enter rebel-controlled
- territories for fear the food may go toward feeding the
- insurgents or the trucks may be ferrying arms to them. His
- obstinacy follows a year of humiliating defeats for his forces
- in Eritrea and Tigre.
- </p>
- <p> The military situation shows no sign of improvement in
- either province. Following an attempted coup against Mengistu
- by members of his own army last May, the government opened
- peace negotiations with the secessionist Eritrean People's
- Liberation Front. They arranged a cease-fire, but a subsequent
- round of talks ended in stalemate last November without any
- agreement for the movement of food to drought-stricken areas.
- To the south in Tigre, two rebel armies have managed to drive
- out all troops and representatives of the civilian government.
- Since August the rebels have been pressing an offensive through
- Gondar and Wollo provinces, seizing towns within 85 miles of
- the capital, Addis Ababa.
- </p>
- <p> What makes this situation doubly frustrating is that
- distribution networks now exist in Eritrea and Tigre--if only
- the government would put them to use. But the organizations are
- controlled by the rebel fronts. The Mengistu government might
- be less obdurate if the food were funneled through the Joint
- Relief Partnership, a group of five Ethiopian churches without
- ties to any of the rebel groups. In response to heavy
- international pressure, Mengistu hinted that the government
- might work with the churches to open "corridors of safe
- passage" through the hardest-hit regions. But he has yet to
- give formal approval.
- </p>
- <p> SUDAN. Since seizing power in a coup last June, Bashir has
- found one pretext after another for preventing relief agencies
- from helping the hungry. In November his fundamentalist Muslim
- government stopped a grain train and banned all emergency
- relief flights bound for the Christian and animist south.
- Khartoum justified the blockade of food and medical supplies
- by claiming that aerial bombardments of two rebel-held towns
- in the south made it too dangerous for relief workers to
- operate. When the rebels, who have no aircraft, charged that the
- bombings were in fact the work of the government, an official
- spokesman vaguely promised an "investigation." The blockade has
- also made it difficult for the U.N.-sponsored Operation
- Lifeline Sudan to supply farmers with seeds and tools for
- planting, just when plentiful rains hold the promise of a
- bumper harvest.
- </p>
- <p> In early December former U.S. President Jimmy Carter tried
- to launch negotiations between Bashir's government and the
- rebel Sudanese People's Liberation Movement, which seeks
- independence from Khartoum's harsh Islamic law. But the talks
- collapsed, and fighting has apparently intensified. On Jan. 4
- a Sudanese guerrilla radio broadcast charged that 2,000
- tribesmen were slaughtered by government-sponsored Arab
- militias in the Jebelein area, 250 miles south of Khartoum. The
- government claims that only 214 were killed, and that the
- deaths followed rioting over a farm dispute.
- </p>
- <p> Reporters have not been able to get into the region to
- verify these reports, but many accounts from witnesses on the
- scene suggest that the government is bent on crushing relief
- operations. On Dec. 21 a plane carrying volunteers from a
- French medical-relief organization was shot down, and three
- French medics and a Sudanese relief worker were killed. Since
- then, the French organization has temporarily recalled two of
- its teams from the area.
- </p>
- <p> There is little hope that either country will settle its
- political differences soon enough to allow a swift rescue of
- the people in peril. Ethiopia has recently claimed victories
- against the Tigre rebels, which may soften Mengistu just enough
- to permit some relief operations, at least for a time. But in
- Sudan, stiff rebel resistance threatens only to convince Bashir
- that his best course is to continue to block the already
- difficult lines of transport into the south--and let
- starvation and disease do the rest.
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe. Reported by David Cemlyn-Jones/Nairobi and
- William Dowell/Cairo.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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